​what we do

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Unsilence fills a critical gap in civics education.​Through storytelling, the arts, and serious games, we unsilence hidden injustices and marginalized voices. We spark dialogue, support critical thinking, and build empathy to inspire healing and social change.

WHAT DO We 'UNSILENCE'?

Unsilence helps communities talk about hidden injustices that can be difficult to talk about. Our work focuses on the process of unsilencing injustices that communities care about, which includes:

mental health and suicide

sexual and domestic violence

political asylum and refugee rights

gun violence

mass incarceration and systemic racism

​transgender, lesbian, gay, and bisexual rights

girls’ and women’s rights

genocide, perpetratorship, and delayed justice

​and many other issues.

Unsilence addresses a broad range of issues, because specific human rights do not exist in isolation; they are interconnected. International agreements like TheUniversal Declaration of Human Rights provide a foundation for our work. Through our on-the-ground programs, partnerships, and local groups, communities get to decide for themselves which injustices are most relevant and urgent.

Young people are our primary audienceUnsilencedelivers leadership training for young people. To do this, engaging educators is key. We train middle school teachers, high school teachers, and informal educators to support young people to learn about human rights, break taboos, and take informed action.

Real change only happens through cross-society dialogueEvery level of a community must be engaged and supportive of the young people and educators working to unsilence injustice. That's why we also train administrative staff, parents, and policymakers in the field of education and in social services, including social workers and health professionals. We also educate the public through community programs and events.

WHAT IS OUR REACH?

So far, Unsilence programs have reached more than 11,000 individuals across 10 states in more than 100 communities. So far, we have trained more than 2,700 educators, and approximately 3,400 teens and 1,110 college students.

95% of Unsilence workshop participants report that they are more comfortable engaging in difficult conversations about injustice.

Unsilence works with schools, museums, youth centers, communities of faith, institutions, and in public spaces. Based in Chicago, we have a local, national, and international reach, including: Arkansas, California, Colorado, Illinois, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Wyoming, and Washington D.C., as well as Poland, Israel, and Germany.

Unsilence uses the power of storytelling, the arts, and serious games to engage young people and educators in highly-interactive learning experiences. Young people learn how to identify root causes of silencing and engage in difficult conversations about injustice, leading them to learn how to bridge perspectives, break down ingrained stigmas, and build collective empathy and understanding.

In-person learning experiences and leadership trainings follow our FRAMEWORK and support young people explore how and why certain human rights become hidden. Unsilence's online interactive features are FREE to use and include:

A just society that values all voices. Unsilence is growing in reach and scope. We are a community working together to shed light on hidden human rights. By giving voice to the marginalized and confronting social stigmas, Unsilence helps young people take action against injustice, build bridges with others, and create solutions to heal their communities.

HOW CAN I GET INVOLVED IN unsilence?

Unsilence offers customized programs for schools, communities, and institutions and keynote interactive lectures for special events. We have opportunities to volunteer. We would love to hear from you. You can also support our groundbreaking work by making a tax-deductible donation.

Unsilence grew out of the doctoral research of learning scientist and fiction writer Danny M. Cohen, under the supervision of Brian Reiser, Phyllis Lassner, Carol D. Lee, and Edd V. Taylor at Northwestern University's School of Education and Social Policy. Danny's study of educators at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center led to his creation of human rights content and educator training programs to help schools and communities "unsilence" marginalized historical and contemporary narratives. Advised by fellow learning scientists and human rights educators, including Stacey Mann, Kelley H. Szany, Alexis S. Morrisroe, and Julia Eksner, the creation of groundbreaking learning experiences and a Framework of Unsilencing led to the founding of Unsilence as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization in 2014.